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| A Clockwork Orange (Penguin Modern Classics) | 
enlarge | Author: Anthony Burgess Creator: Blake Morrison Publisher: Penguin Classics Category: Book
List Price: £8.99 Buy Used: £1.95 You Save: £7.04 (78%)
New (42) from £2.59
Avg. Customer Rating: 166 reviews Sales Rank: 2754
Media: Paperback Edition: New edition Pages: 176 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.1 x 0.5
ISBN: 0141182601 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780141182605 ASIN: 0141182601
Publication Date: February 24, 2000 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: DESPATCHED FROM UK, BOOKS SHIPPED DAILY.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 161 more reviews...
Creative and Disturbing May 27, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a fantastic and clever book. It follows in the same vein as Orwell's 1984, but takes things that one step further. The book is narrated by the compelling anti-hero Alex. It is written in the language of the gangs of the streets of this dystopian future place, which now is not so very unlike our own society. Alex hates school and rails against authority, hanging out with his gang of thugs in the Corova Milk Bar, taking drugs, raping girls and enjoying nights of bloody mayhem.
An ill-judged robbery goes hideously wrong and Alex is incarcerated in prison, where he becomes the subject of a new social experiment which claims to reprogramme the brain so that violence is no longer an option. Alex takes us through these events and their aftermath in his peculiarly charming and yet repellent words.
Burgess takes on the big themes of social control, anarchy and free will in this fascinating and brilliant book. If you have read the book you will want to see Kubrick's film, which is also brilliant in a completely different way. If you have seen the film prepare to be wowed by the book. Stick with the language, after a while it becomes easy to read as you become immersed into Alex's world and it's well worth the effort.
Couldn't put it down and surprisingly understood it! May 19, 2008 This book orginally sat in my boyfriends bathroom for a year because I felt this was going to be a hard book to read. When you look at a page without reading it, what stands out is the large amount of words not in standard english, slang and foreign words. Just glancing in it maybe you'd think this was a foreign language book. However when I had nothing else to read and was 'forced' to read this book, I found it surprisingly easy to read and was delighted by the fact that I didn't have to look in the glossary once. I loved the way the story panned out, was shocked in a way, that the book was more graphic, more controversial than the film. I also think that one feels more sympathetic to the narrators plight than in the film, I suppose this is uncomfortable for some people. Uncomfortable or not this is a good book.
Better Than The Film April 8, 2008 Like most people I saw the film before I read the book and I am glad that I have viewed both. The film is a wonderful `work of art` and the book is a modern day masterpiece. Anthony Burgess painted a picture of modern society 30 years before `youth culture` was invented. This book compares with Orwells 1984, Bowies `Diamond Dogs` and `Till Death Us Do Part by Garry Jackson. My biggest wish is a remake of the film.
Till Death Us Do Part & More April 5, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is the book that inspired a thousand films and a hundred books. This is a true classic that rates alongside 1984 by George Orwell and The Traitor by PJ WEllings. It was written before teenage cults and punks and skinheads but it captures the `gang` culture better than any other book. This book will still be topical in 100 years from now and the closest book to compare to this is Till Dearh Us Do Part by Garry Jackson. The film is fantastic but the novel is a true work of art.
Just brilliant March 31, 2008 At first, A Clockwork Orange is very hard to read, it being written in a strange slang called Nadsat which uses some russian words for inspiration. However, please dont be put of, as this is a wonderful book. Alex is the perfect amoral antihero that you eventually grow to feel for and dispise. The film has a very different ending to the book, as it is based on the American version which does not have the final 21st chapter that the British version has. Im currently doing my GSCE English course in school and I can safely say that no book or play we have been 'forced' to study has inspired me quite as much as this.
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